The 2016 Democratic National Convention is from Monday July 25 until Thursday July 28. Get live updates and analysis from the ABC News team as the action at the convention in Philadelphia unfolds.

From ABC's MATTHEW CLAIBORNE: Chelsea Clinton is in the arena and will watch her father Bill Clinton's speech with her husband Marc tonight.

by Veronica.Stracqualursi7/27/2016 1:31:31 AM

September 11 Survivor Describes Hillary Clinton's Help After Attack

(Saul Loeb/AFP/Getty Images)

ABC's ALANA ABRAMSON: Lauren Manning, a September 11 survivor who was burned on over 82 percent of her body on during the attacks, described how Hillary Clinton cared for her in the months after that day

Manning described how Clinton “walked into [her] hospital room and took [her] bandaged hand in her own."

"Our connection wasn’t between a senator and her constituent," said Manning. "Our connection was person to person.”

Manning concluded her brief remarks by saying how, just as Clinton was there for NYC after 9/11, she is now ready and willing to be there for the United States as president.

"I trusted her when my life was on the line, and she came through. Not for the cameras, not because anyone was watching, but because that’s who she is," said Manning. "Kind. Caring. Loyal. This is the Hillary Clinton I want you to know.”

by Adam Kelsey7/27/2016 1:34:42 AM

Howard Dean Reprises ‘Dean Scream’ in Support of Clinton

ABC's VERONICA STRACQUALURSI: The former Vermont Governor and former Democratic National Committee Chairman Howard Dean hit both Donald Trump for his proposed healthcare policy and his VP Mike Pence’s record on healthcare.

"Donald Trump has a plan, too. He would rip up Obamacare and throw 20 million people off their health insurance,” Dean said.

“And what is he going to replace this with?” Dean asked.

Dean made the case for Clinton: “And we need a president who will never stop fighting to ensure that universal health care is a basic human right. And if that is the president we want, if that is the America that we believe in, then do not wait until November to make your voice heard.”

The former Vermont Governor, who ran for president in 2004, brought back his “DeanScream.”

“It's going to be won in Colorado and in Iowa and North Carolina and Michigan and Florida and Pennsylvania and then we go to the White House,” Dean said with gusto tonight.

ABC's JENNIFER HANSLER: Amy Klobuchar lauded Clinton as “a leader who knows we areall more secure when women have the opportunity to lead with their heads highand their strides strong.”

The Minnesota senator linked the despicable crimes of “forced labor and sexual servitude” to the fight for security and human rights and that the problem is not only present abroad, but also in the United States. Klobuchar noted that Clinton undertook the fight to end sex trafficking domestically as Secretary of State “because she knows that if we are going to be a beacon for the world, then we have to get our own house in order.” She said the fight human rights and dignity is one that Clinton would continue as President.

"Elevating women across the world so they're treated with dignity and respect — that's what Hillary Clinton will do,” Klobuchar said. “And if that means playing the woman card, Donald Trump, let me tell you: there are hundreds of millions of women in this world who are ready to play that card. And in the United States of America, it's called the voting card.”

Klobuchar then introduced Ima Matul Maisaroh, who at 17 years old was trafficked and abused for three years in a village in Indonesia.

“I have hope, especially now that Hillary Clinton is running for president!” she said.

by Veronica.Stracqualursi7/27/2016 2:03:07 AM

Former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright Speaks at DNC

ABC's ADAM KELSEY: Madeleine Albright, the first woman to serve as secretary of state, gave a full-throated endorsement of the woman married to the president whose administration she served, Bill Clinton.

Albright described travelling with Hillary Clinton and the newly-minted Democratic nominee's willingness to speak out, even as First Lady.

"We went to the Beijing Women’s Conference," said Albright. "She courageously stood up and spoke out on behalf of human rights and women’s rights, inspiring millions to fight for a better future."

The 79-year-old Albright discussed what she has in common with Clinton, listed some of the qualifications that Clinton possesses, and dissed Donald Trump's reality show.

"We [both] know what it’s like to step off that plane with the words “United States of America” on it," said Albright. "She knows that safeguarding freedom and security is not like hosting a TV reality show."

The former secretary of state closed by noting the danger of electing the candidate preferred by Russian leader Vladimir Putin.

"A Trump victory in November would be a gift to Vladimir Putin, and given what we have learned about Russia’s recent actions, Putin is eager for Trump to win," said Albright. "And that should worry every American."

by Adam Kelsey7/27/2016 2:04:04 AM

Trump weighs in just before former president Bill Clinton takes the stage at the DNC.

“I married my best friend. I was still in awe after more than four years of being around her at how smart and strong and loving and caring she was," Bill Clinton said of his wife Hillary. The Clintons have been married for 40 years.

by Veronica.Stracqualursi7/27/2016 2:27:53 AM

Bill on HRC marriage: "I really hope her choosing me and rejecting my advice to choose her own career was a decision she'd never regret"

Bill Clinton sought to paint a difference between the portrait of Hillary Clinton that Republicans presented at the Republican National Convention last week and the "real" Hillary Clinton.

"How does this square with the things that you heard at the Republican convention?" Bill Clinton asked. “How do you square it? You can't. One is real, the other is made up." Clinton argued his wife was "trustworthy" and a "real change maker."

The former president continued: “The real one, if you saw her friend vote for Illinois tonight has friends from childhood through Arkansas where she has not lived in more than 20 years. The real one calls you when you're sick, when your kid's in trouble or when there's a death in the family.”